Dr. Christopher B. R. Smith

Associate Professor
School of Social Work
St. John's College,
Room: J-2009A
(Cross-Appointed, Community Health
& Humanities, Faculty of Medicine)
糖心视频 University of Newfoundland
St. John's, NL, Canada, A1C 5S7
Phone: (709) 864-7701 (office)
(709) 341-7909 (mobile)
Email: csmith13@mun.ca (institutional)
cbrs1977@gmail.com (personal)
鈥淭he nervous system is not contained within the body's limits. The circuit from sense-perception to motor response begins and ends in the world. The brain is thus not an isolable anatomical body, but part of a system that passes through the person and her or his (culturally specific, historically transient) environment. As the source of stimuli and the arena for motor response, the external world must be included to complete the sensory circuit鈥︹
(Buck-Morss, S. [1992]. Aesthetics and Anaesthetics. October, 62, 3鈥41.)
Christopher has over 10 years鈥 experience working in 鈥榤ental health鈥 and 鈥榓ddiction鈥 鈥 his established area of research emphasis 鈥 in academic, community-based, and professional (government) research consulting capacities, from Canada, to the U.S., to Australia. Given these commitments, Christopher consistently attempts to situate People who Use Drugs (PUD) as 鈥榚xperts鈥 by working in direct collaboration with PUD, foregrounding their voices, perspectives and experiential knowledge. From this perspective, Christopher鈥檚 work regarding substance use, harm reduction, and the increasing recognition, power, and momentum of groups by and for PUD, belongs to the emergent interdisciplinary field of Critical Drug Studies.
Teaching: Despite the militant policing of Social Work鈥檚 fundamentally interdisciplinary borders as a 鈥楶rofessional鈥, 鈥楶ractice-Based鈥 discipline, given his interdisciplinary, theoretically-driven, research-intensive training, Christopher brings diverse interdisciplinary theories and methods to bear on Social Work. Here, Christopher鈥檚 teaching integrates relevant theories and methods from Public Health, Sociology, Anthropology, and Cultural Studies. As an anarchist, Christopher鈥檚 teaching practice is rooted in the interdependent, mutually constituting relationship between teaching, research, and public engagement, where he attempts to close the perceived divide between the university and the community, academia and everyday life.
Supervision: Given his experience supervising projects on harm reduction and People Living with HIV/AIDS, social and health services for trans and gender fluid individuals, housing issues among aging PUD, the biopolitics of methadone maintenance treatment, and overdose prevention initiatives in Canadian correctional institutions, Christopher is eager to work with Masters or Ph.D. students interested in virtually any facet of substance use, mental health and/or related issues.
Research: Christopher鈥檚 current research includes: (1) serving as the Newfoundland and Labrador-based Principal Investigator for a federal Public Health Agency of Canada investigation regarding risk behavior among People who Inject Drugs; (2) acting as a member of the National Advisory Committee and the Education Working Group for a federally funded Health Professional Education collaboration between Social Work, Nursing, and Pharmacy regulatory bodies, entitled Empowering the next generation of health care and social service professionals with knowledge, skills, tools and supports to address substance use issues in Canada, and (3) critically investigating the role and importance of substance use education in Social Work curriculum across Canada. In the coming years, Christopher aims to submit a major grant proposal based on a comparative, international, research-driven project concerning organizations established by and for PUD.
Publications: Christopher has been involved in publishing two separate books, including a sole-authored book entitled (Routledge), and a collection of essays co-edited with Dr. Zack Marshall (McGill) entitled . See below for a complete list of Christopher鈥檚 publications. Please do not hesitate to contact Christopher directly, either by phone or email (above).
Publications
BOOKS
Smith, C.B.R. (2016) (Advances in Sociology Series, #163). New York: Routledge.
Smith, C.B.R. & Marshall, Z. (Eds.) (2016) Public Health in the 21st Century Series. Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
BOOK CHAPTERS and REFEREED JOURNAL ARTICLES
Smith, C.B.R., & Foss, J. (2025). . Critical and Radical Social Work.
Smith, C.B.R. (2018). Playing (un)dead: Interrogating invocations of 鈥榤onster鈥 metaphors in (post-)MMT service user narratives of methadone, maintenance and treatment. DOI: 10.23937/2474-3631/1510028.
Smith, C.B.R. (2016). Direct Action and Drug-Related Harm: Affinity-Based Tactics in the Founding and Development of the North American Harm Reduction Movement.
Smith, C.B.R. (2016). 鈥樚切氖悠 nothing without us鈥: A comparative analysis of autonomous organizing and activism among people with lived experience of illicit substance use and psychiatrization in Canada. Intersectionalities: A Global Journal of Social Work Analysis, Research, Polity, and Practice (Special Issue: 鈥.
French, R., Moores, L.B., Sheppard, S. & Smith, C.B.R. (2016). Faculty-Student-Service User Collaboration: Community-Based Action Research Regarding Service User Involvement in Mental Health and Addiction Policy. .
Smith, C.B.R. (2016). Harm Reduction Hipsters: Socio-Spatial-Political Displacement and the Gentrification of Public Health. In C.B.R. Smith & Z. Marshall (Eds.) Critical Approaches to Harm Reduction: Conflict, Institutionalization, (De-)Politicization, & Direct Action (pp. 209-229). Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
Smith, C.B.R. (2014). Place Promotion, Spatial Purification and the Spectre of Addiction/Treatment. In M. P. Amado (Ed.) Urban Planning: Practices, Challenges and Benefits (pp. 1-18), Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
Strike, C., Millson, M., Hopkins, S. & Smith, C.B.R. (2013). What is Low Threshold Methadone Treatment? International Journal of Drug Policy, 24, e51-e56. DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2013.05.005
Smith, C.B.R. (2012). Disorder and the body of drugs: addiction, consumption, control and city space. In J. Lee (Ed.) Cultures of Addiction (pp. 57-88). Amherst, N.Y.: Cambria Press.
Smith, C.B.R. (2012). Harm reduction as anarchist practice: A users鈥 guide to capitalism and addiction in North America. Critical Public Health, 22(2), 209-221.
Smith, C.B.R. (2011). The intoxication of narcotic modernity: Cyborg subjectivity, urban space and the media/technology of substance. Journal of Transgressive Culture, 1(1), 47-84.
Smith, C.B.R. (2011). A users鈥 guide to 鈥榡uice bars鈥 and 鈥榣iquid handcuffs鈥: Fluid negotiations of subjectivity, space and substance in methadone treatment. Space and Culture, 14(3), 291-309.
Smith, C.B.R. (2010). Socio-spatial stigmatization and the contested space of addiction treatment: Remapping strategies of opposition to the disorder of drugs. Social Science & Medicine, 70(6), 859-866.
Smith, C.B.R. (2006). Free parking space: Elementary exercises in auto-intervention. .
Smith, C.B.R. (2004). 鈥榃hose streets?鈥: Urban social movements and the politicization of public space. .
POLICY-RELATED PROFESSIONAL RESEARCH PAPERS
Bayoumi, A.M. & Strike, C. (Co-Principal Investigators), Jairam, J., Watson, T., Enns, E., Kolla, G., Lee, A., Shepherd, S., Hopkins, S., Millson, M., Leonard, L., Zaric, G., Luce, J., Degani, N., Fischer, B., Glazier, R., O鈥機ampo, P., Smith, C.B.R., Penn, R., Brandeau, M. (2012). . Toronto, ON: St. Michael鈥檚 Hospital / Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto.
Brands, B., Weisdorf, T. Novotna, G. Kushnir, V. & Smith, C.B.R. (2011). . Toronto: College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO).
Cheng, R. & Smith, C.B.R. (2009). Toronto, ON: Ontario Ministry of Health.
LITERARY, ARTISTIC and CREATIVE WORK
Smith, C.B.R. (2019). Cracked on the Rock, Vol. 3 (Mad Pride on the Rock Zine Contributor [鈥業nterstitial鈥橾 and Co-Organizer). St. John鈥檚, NL: Mad Pride on the Rock.
Smith, C.B.R. (2017). Cracked on the Rock, Vol. 2 (Mad Pride on the Rock Zine Contributor and Co-Organizer). St. John鈥檚, NL: Mad Pride on the Rock.
Smith, C.B.R. (2012). Ethnographic Anecdotes from the Junk Shop, .
Smith, C.B.R. (2012). Inequality in (K)illadelphia. Digital Video, 32min.
Smith, C.B.R. (2006). Digital Video, 5m45s.
Smith, C.B.R. (2005). . Digital Video, 10m55s.
Smith, C.B.R. (2005). Digital Video, 2m25s.
Smith, C.B.R. (2001). 鈥楧ragging the River鈥 & 鈥楧awn Variations.鈥 In Drink Me: Inner Aqueous Excerpts (Trent University English Society Publication). Peterborough, ON: Trent University.
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
Smith, C.B.R., Andrews, S. & Tobin, C. (2019). The Substance of Social Work: Critically Interrogating the 鈥楶lace鈥 of Substance Use Education in Canadian Social Work Curriculum. Canadian Collaborative Mental Health Care Conference (CCMHCC), Richmond, B.C., 10-12 May, 2019.
Smith, C.B.R. (2018). Social Work and Substance Use: Interrogating Substance Use Education in Canadian Social Work Curriculum. Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse (CRISM) Atlantic Symposium 2018: Redesigning our Approach to Substance Use. Moncton, N.B., 20th November 2018.
Smith, C.B.R. (2012). Best practices in methadone prescriber recruiting: Lessons learned and implications for future research. Annual Victorian Scientific and Fellowship Meeting (AVSFM), Surgeons Leading Cultural Change in Patient Care. Melbourne, AUS.
Bayoumi, A., Fischer, B., Smith, C.B.R., Strike, C. & Watson, T. (2011). Systematic review of the design and operation of supervised consumption sites. Canadian Association for HIV Research (CAHR) Conference, Toronto, ON.
Strike, C., Millson, P. Fischer, B., Bayoumi, A. & Smith, C.B.R. (2011). Conditional acceptance and rejection of supervised consumption sites (SCS). Canadian Association for HIV Research (CAHR) Conference, Toronto, ON.
Smith, C.B.R. & Millson, P. (2007). Drug users鈥 qualitative commentary concerning the potential establishment of a supervised consumption site (SCS) in Toronto, Ontario. Ontario HIV Treatment Network (OHTN) Research Conference, Toronto, ON.